BackgroundShort-course regimens are currently explored to improve multidrug-resistant tuberculosis effects, reduce costs, as well as enhance patient adherence. Currently, we are determining the most cost-effective shorter regimen out of seven short-course regimens (6–9 months) to treat drug-resistant tuberculosis (DR-TB) compared to the current standard of care (SoC) 9- to 11-month regimen.
MethodsCost-effectiveness of various short-course DR-TB treatment regimens, namely BEAT, BPaL, BPaLM, BPaLC, mBPaL1, mBPaL2, and mBPaL3, was compared to the current SoC in India. Decision tree model was used from a health system perspective. The information on various costs – such as preinvestigations, regimens, adverse drug reactions (ADRs) management, inpatient treatment – and on effect – such as clinical outcomes and ADRs – was collected from different published sources. It estimated costs, quality-adjusted life years, and incremental cost-effectiveness ratios (ICERs). Sensitivity analyses were performed to validate outcomes against the willingness-to-pay threshold.
ResultsWhen all the short-course regimens were compared with the current SoC regimen, the ICERs were ₹5,385, ₹2,014, ₹2,008, ₹2,435, ₹1,462, ₹1,159, and ₹1,895 for BEAT, BPaL, BPaLM, BPaLC, mBPaL1, mBPaL2, and mBPaL3, respectively. Among the short-course regimens, mBPaL2 is the dominant strategy, and mBPaL1 has extended dominance. For all Bedaquiline-containing regimens, the cost of the drug is a crucial factor in determining cost effectiveness. The cost-effectiveness acceptability curve showed that all shorter regimens were 100 percent cost-effective.
ConclusionThe implementation of Bedaquiline-based regimen to treat DR-TB has become more effective, shorter in duration, and less burdensome to the health system.